I-83 highlighted in red; I-83 Bus. in blue | |||||||
Route information | |||||||
Maintained byBaltimore DOT,MDSHA,PennDOT | |||||||
Length | 85.03 mi[1] (136.84 km) | ||||||
Existed | 1959[2]–present | ||||||
NHS | Entire route | ||||||
Major junctions | |||||||
South end | President Street /Fayette Street inBaltimore, MD | ||||||
Major intersections |
| ||||||
North end | ![]() ![]() | ||||||
Location | |||||||
Country | United States | ||||||
States | Maryland,Pennsylvania | ||||||
Counties | MD:City of Baltimore,Baltimore PA:York,Cumberland,Dauphin | ||||||
Highway system | |||||||
|
Interstate 83 (I-83) is anInterstate Highway located in the states ofMaryland andPennsylvania in theEastern United States. Its southern terminus is at a signalized intersection withFayette Street inBaltimore, Maryland; its northern terminus is atI-81 nearHarrisburg, Pennsylvania. I-83 runs fromDowntown Baltimore north toI-695 near the northern suburb ofTimonium on theJones Falls Expressway before forming aconcurrency with I-695. After splitting from I-695, the route follows theBaltimore–Harrisburg Expressway north to the border between Maryland and Pennsylvania. Upon crossing the state line, I-83 becomes theVeterans of Foreign Wars of the United States Memorial Highway and continues north throughYork toward the Harrisburg area. The route runs along the southern and eastern portion of theCapital Beltway that encircles Harrisburg before reaching its northern terminus.
Most of the route south ofLemoyne, Pennsylvania, is a direct replacement ofU.S. Route 111 (US 111), a former spur ofUS 11.
mi[1] | km | |
---|---|---|
MD | 34.50 | 55.52 |
PA | 50.53 | 81.32 |
Total | 85.03 | 136.84 |
TheJones Falls Expressway (JFX) is a 10.2-mile-long (16.4 km)freeway that carries I-83 fromDowntown Baltimore to the northern suburbs. It is the area's true north–south artery becauseI-95 runs from southwest to northeast through the southern edge of the city. Its southern terminus is atFayette Street, and its northern terminus is atMaryland Route 25 (MD 25), just north of theBaltimore Beltway (I-695). InsideBaltimore, the road is maintained not by theMaryland State Highway Administration (MDSHA), which controls most freeways in the state, but by the city'sdepartment of transportation.
The freeway begins at an at-grade, four-way intersection between the JFX, Fayette Street, andPresident Street, located in close proximity to thePhoenix Shot Tower. President Street continues south along the eastern edge of thecentral business district (CBD) to terminate at a traffic circle inInner Harbor East. Fayette Street serves as an access route into the downtown area.
Passing beneath the Orleans Street Viaduct (US 40), the JFX runs north, passing near theWashington Monument. Between exits 3 and 4, there is a 90-degree turn that sometimes requires motorists to slow down just before entering it, with an advisory speed posted at 40 mph (64 km/h). The curve is located between theGuilford Avenue andPreston Street overpasses. Within the curve, the southbound JFX interchanges withMD 2, with an exit toSt. Paul Street and an entrance fromCharles Street (MD 139).
Having passed this curve, the JFX begins to parallelMD 25, going under theHoward Street Bridge and interchanging with Maryland Avenue and North Avenue (US 1/US 40 Truck) before continuing north pastDruid Lake, forming the northeastern boundary ofDruid Hill Park. Running northwest out of the city center, the JFX is paralleled by its namesake river, theJones Falls, on one side, and theMaryland Transit Administration'sBaltimore Light RailLink line on the other. Closer to downtown, the light rail line peels off in a different direction, while the falls flows directly underneath the elevated freeway.
After interchanging withCold Spring Lane andNorthern Parkway (between which liesCylburn Arboretum), the JFX exits Baltimore, enteringBaltimore County. Passing close toMt. Washington Pediatric Hospital,Mount Saint Agnes College, andJones Falls Park, the route skirts the edge ofLake Roland before interchanging withRuxton Road just south ofI-695 (Baltimore Beltway).
At the beltway, I-83 leaves the JFX and joins I-695 for a distance of 1.4 miles (2.3 km), where it separates from the latter route to continue onward into northern Maryland. Meanwhile, the JFX continues for another 0.5 miles (0.80 km) in a four-lane divided format before terminating at an at-grade intersection with MD 25 (Falls Road). I-83 and I-695 split off at the southern terminus of the Baltimore–Harrisburg Expressway, and I-695 continues its eastward trek towardTowson andParkville.
After separating from the beltway, I-83 is now known as theBaltimore–Harrisburg Expressway. Running due north away from the beltway, the route parallelsMD 45 (York Road), the former route ofUS 111. Passing to the west ofTimonium andCockeysville, I-83 leaves the suburban belt around Baltimore and enters rural Baltimore County just north ofHunt Valley atShawan Road. I-83 and MD 45 continue to parallel one another through the northern portion of the county, with MD 45 crossing over I-83 once, at an interchange. This segment of I-83 has several sections with higher than usual gradients.
The only major settlement encountered by I-83 along this stretch isMonkton, reached viaMD 137. To the west of I-83, MD 137 connects with the northern terminus of MD 25, I-83's former companion to the south.
The Interstate eventually crosses theMason–Dixon line intoYork County, Pennsylvania, 25 miles (40 km) north of Baltimore, mere feet from a partial interchange withFreeland Road and parallel with MD 45; the latter route becomes theSusquehanna Trail when it reaches Pennsylvania.
Throughout Pennsylvania, I-83 is named the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States Memorial Highway.[3] I-83 enters Pennsylvania, crossing the Mason–Dixon line and passing to the east ofShrewsbury as it runs due north towardYork. The route bypasses the boroughs ofLoganville andJacobus before entering the city of York.
I-83 has a business route through downtown York, known asI-83 Business (I-83 Bus.). The business route follows the former path of US 111, while I-83 turns northeast and then north again to bypass the urban area. NearPennsylvania Route 462 (PA 462), theLincoln Highway, the Interstate turns west for a short distance, then north again to an interchange withUS 30. Beyond US 30, I-83 resumes its straight path, running due north out of York and passing to the west ofEmigsville.
North ofPA 297, I-83 is known as the Susquehanna Expressway.[citation needed] It maintains this name as it passes to the south and west ofValley Green, continuing north towardHarrisburg. South of Harrisburg, I-83 has an interchange withI-76 (Pennsylvania Turnpike). North of I-76, I-83 continues due north, passing throughNew Cumberland, before an interchange with the eastern terminus ofPA 581 inLemoyne.
After the interchange with PA 581, I-83 is known as theCapital Beltway. The highway turns due east and crosses theSusquehanna River over theJohn Harris Bridge, south ofDowntown Harrisburg, passing south ofPaxtang before encounteringI-283 andUS 322 at the Eisenhower Interchange. Within the interchange, I-83 exits from itself, with each direction of traffic following a one-lane ramp; facing east, I-83's former lanes become US 322, while, facing north, I-283's lanes become I-83. The interchanges includes ramps to local roads as well. From this point northbound to exit 51, traffic is often congested during daylight hours. I-83 and westbound US 322 continue north toward US 22 and I-81, I-283 goes due south toward the turnpike andPA 283's western terminus, and eastbound US 322 goes due east towardHershey.
Beyond this interchange, I-83 and US 322 run due north through the eastern suburbs of Harrisburg, interchanging withUS 22 northeast of the CBD inColonial Park, before I-83 terminates at a three-way semidirectional interchange withI-81. From here, US 322 continues west along I-81 south.[4]
I-83 was one of the first Interstate Highways built in Pennsylvania. Much of its routing through the state follows a freeway bypass of the since decommissionedUS 111. The route received the I-83 designation in 1960. The first section built (opened 1954) runs fromPA 392 inNewberry Township north toPA 114 inFairview Township. The entire highway was completed in 1971 with the massive Eisenhower Interchange in Harrisburg.[5]
From 2012 to 2015, the I-83/PA 581 interchange outside of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, was modified. Formerly, I-83 was reduced to one lane going northbound through the interchange, resulting in frequent traffic jams during peak travel times. The northbound part of the highway was widened, one bridge was replaced, and several exits in the vicinity were reconfigured.[6] A second project started in 2016, with work to be completed from its northern terminus at I-81 to just past the Union Deposit Road interchange. The project, completed in 2022, reconstructed two interchanges and associated overpasses, as well as widened adjacent sections of the highway to six throughlanes.[7][8]
The interchange withPA 851 near Shrewsbury was reconstructed into adiverging diamond interchange, which opened to traffic on June 28, 2021.[9]
In York, Pennsylvania, a reconstruction of the Mt. Rose Avenue (PA 124) interchange took place from 2015 to 2022 in anticipation of a future widening of I-83 around the east and north sides of the city. Also, studies are being done north of town to help ease traffic in a section heavily traveled by trucks.[10][11][12]
On October 23, 2023, work began on a project that will reconstruct the section of I-83 in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, from the John Harris Bridge over the Susquehanna River to the Eisenhower Interchange with I-283 and US 322. The project will be split into two contracts, with the project widening and reconstructing I-83 and rebuilding interchanges. As part of this project, a new interchange will be built withPA 230 (Cameron Street) while the 13th Street interchange will be closed. Construction on both contracts is expected to be finished in 2028.[13]
The first Interstate to be built in Baltimore was the JFX; theGreater Baltimore Committee pushed to enact legislation from theBaltimore City Council in 1955.[14] It was the first to be constructed due to community opposition to the other planned freeways within the city.[citation needed] The JFX follows the path of theJones Falls River, a natural corridor that divided the city into eastern and western segments. By the early 1960s, the JFX was completed as far asGuilford Avenue, within the city limits. It was completed as far as Pleasant Street in the downtown area by 1983, but the remaining 4.4 miles (7.1 km) toI-95 were canceled in September 1982. To compensate for the loss of the remainder of the JFX, the portion in situ was extended to Fayette Street by 1987, and the Jones Falls Boulevard project substantially rebuilt 0.75 miles (1.21 km) of President Street, across from the JFX at Fayette Street, to allow the traffic to and from the Interstate to be collected and distributed from the surrounding city streets. By 1990, the project was completed.
Due to community opposition to the other freeway plans being produced by city officials, the JFX was the very first limited-access highway to be completed within the city of Baltimore and remained so for several years. Originally, the JFX was to continue through the Southeast Baltimore neighborhoods ofFell's Point[15] andCanton to a junction with the then-planned I-95, but opposition from residents of those neighborhoods successfully blocked that proposal.[16] As a result, I-83 became the first Maryland road in theInterstate Highway System.[2]
As part of the planning for an east–west route through Baltimore, the alignment of the JFX underwent various modifications. Under the original plan for freeways in Baltimore, the 1962Baltimore 10-D Interstate System, the JFX would have junctioned I-70N (which became I-70 in 1975) and I-95, which were planned to follow an east–west route through the southern edge of the CBD, near the southeastern edge of the CBD. The JFX would end at roughly the same location where it currently does.[17] As a result of community opposition to other portions of the 10-D System, the 1969Baltimore 3-A Interstate and Boulevard System was adopted by the city. In this plan, the JFX would continue south along its present alignment then turn east and pass through theFell's Point neighborhood on a six-lane elevated viaduct, before continuing east along Boston Street to junction I-95 (which was also rerouted to its current alignment) north of theFort McHenry Tunnel. In the mid-1970s, this plan was modified due to fears that the viaduct would result in destruction of the Fell's Point area, which contains many historic properties. Under the modification, I-83 would continue south and descend into a six-lane underwater tunnel beneath theInner Harbor, then turn east under the harbor, pass to the south of Fell's Point, return to the surface in theCanton area and continue to I-95.[18]
Under this plan, I-83 was expected to act mostly as a northerly spur to and from the CBD and as an easterly spur to and from the CBD; through traffic was expected to be a small proportion of the total amount making use of the route. I-83's terminus at I-95 would have been a full three-way freeway-to-freeway interchange, with a full complement of ramps provided for access to and fromBoston andO'Donnell streets.[19] When construction began on I-95 through East Baltimore in the mid-1970s, a short six-lane section was built within the vicinity of the planned I-83 interchange. This was done in anticipation of I-83 connecting the CBD to I-95, the rest of which carries at least eight lanes of traffic throughout the city.
By 1963, the JFX was completed as far south as Guilford Avenue and, by the mid-1970s, was extended to Monument Street. By 1983, the route extended all the way to Pleasant Street, with a dead-end bridge stub indicating plans to continue south along the 3-A alignment to I-95.
In September 1982, however, the segment of the JFX between Pleasant Street and I-95, a distance of 4.4 miles (7.1 km), was officially withdrawn from theInterstate Highway System. Robert Douglas, then the chief of the Interstate Division for Baltimore City (IDBC), stated at the time that the very high financial costs of the I-83 extension (estimated at $609 million in the early 1980s [equivalent to $2.06 billion in 2023[20]], and likely to reach $1 billion [equivalent to $3.39 billion in 2023[20]] with inflation taken into account) led to the cancelation of the segment. As a result, the JFX was truncated at Fayette Street, ending at an at-grade intersection.[21]
To make up for the loss of the I-83 segment, the Jones Falls Boulevard project substantially rebuilt approximately 0.5 miles (0.80 km) of President Street between I-83 and the downtown area to provide the capacity to absorb traffic to and from the Interstate; the project was completed by 1987. Other roadways in the canceled I-83 corridor also benefited from major reconstruction and rehabilitation.[21] The federal funding planned to be used for the I-83 extension was instead cross-transferred to other highway projects; routes that may have benefited[original research?] includeI-97,I-195,I-370, and the upgrade of a portion of theJohn Hanson Highway toI-595.
AsCongress worked toward reauthorization of theSurface Transportation and Uniform Relocation Assistance Act, the Greater Lynchburg Chamber of Commerce and other groups in Virginia wanted I-83 extended southward to provide bypasses forCharlottesville,Lynchburg, andDanville, and to link those cities toGreensboro, North Carolina. By June 1991, Robert LaLone, director of programs for the Lynchburg Chamber, admitted that an Interstate was unlikely, but upgradingUS 29, with bypasses included, is more likely.[22]
The possibility of extending I-83 (rather thanI-99) north toRochester, New York, was discussed at the October 2002 I-99 Task Force meeting. Part of the proposed route onUS 11/US 15, however, has since been rebuilt as a four-lane surface road that does not meetInterstate standards.[citation needed] Expensive additional reconstruction, including new interchanges, service roads, and realignments, would be necessary. The farthest north that I-83 could be extended currently would beBenvenue, Pennsylvania, on a bridge over theSusquehanna River, where a recently built freeway section ofUS 22/US 322 (Dauphin Bypass) downgrades to an undivided four-lane road. Recently, however, theCentral Susquehanna Valley Thruway, a 10-mile (16 km) freeway project along the proposed corridor nearShamokin Dam, Pennsylvania, has been approved and is under construction as of 2016,[23][24] with the first section opening in 2022.[25]
In 2005,Walter Sondheim, a prominent Baltimore city planner unveiled a proposal to tear down the elevated portion of the JFX that leads into downtown. In the JFX's place,President Street would be extended north toEager Street, where the elevated section ends. City officials have since offered tentative support for the idea, though it is unlikely that any action will be taken until about 2020, when the current elevated structure will need an overhaul if it is to remain in use. If the downtown JFX were demolished, Baltimore would joinSan Francisco,Boston, andMilwaukee to become among the large U.S. cities that have removed some of their downtown elevated freeways. On May 17, 2009,The Baltimore Sun revealed a plan by Rummel, Klepper & Kahl LLP, to tear down a mile (1.6 km) of the JFX to create an urban boulevard that would help connect downtown to the east side of the city and theJohns Hopkins Hospital.[26]
Exit numbers in Pennsylvania were changed in April 2001 fromsequence-based todistance-based.
State | County | Location | mi[27][28][29] | km | Old exit[30] | New exit[30] | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Maryland | Baltimore City | 0.00 | 0.00 | President Street /Fayette Street east | Southern terminus;at-grade intersection; access toJohns Hopkins Medical Campus andShot Tower–Market Place station | |||
1 | Fayette Street west | Southbound exit only | ||||||
Gay Street | Northbound entrance only | |||||||
0.30 | 0.48 | — | Pleasant Street | Southbound exit only | ||||
0.90 | 1.45 | 3 | Chase Street | Northbound exit only | ||||
Guilford Avenue | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | |||||||
1.29 | 2.08 | 4 | ![]() ![]() | Southbound exit and northbound entrance; access toPenn Station | ||||
1.51 | 2.43 | 5 | Maryland Avenue | Southbound exit only | ||||
1.85 | 2.98 | 6 | ![]() ![]() ![]() | Access toNorth Avenue Light Rail station andMICA | ||||
2.42 | 3.89 | 7 | 28th Street / Druid Park Lake Drive | Signed as exits 7A (Druid Park Lake) and 7B (28th Street) northbound | ||||
3.02 | 4.86 | 8 | ![]() ![]() | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||||
4.74 | 7.63 | 9 | Cold Spring Lane | Signed as exits 9A (east) and 9B (west) northbound; access toCold Spring Lane Light Rail station andLoyola University Maryland | ||||
5.86 | 9.43 | 10 | Northern Parkway | Signed as exits 10A (east) and 10B (west) northbound; access toPimlico Race Course andSinai Hospital | ||||
Baltimore | Ruxton | 8.97 | 14.44 | 12 | ![]() ![]() | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||
Brooklandville | 9.74 | 15.68 | 23 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Signed as exits 23B (MD 25) and 23A (I-695) southbound; south end of I-695 overlap; exit number not signed northbound | |||
Lutherville | 11.26 | 18.12 | 24 | ![]() ![]() | North end of I-695 overlap; New York not signed southbound; exit number not signed southbound | |||
Timonium | 12.59 | 20.26 | 16 | Timonium Road | Signed as exits 16A (east) and 16B (west) northbound; access toFairgrounds station | |||
14.02 | 22.56 | 17 | Padonia Road | |||||
Cockeysville | 15.44 | 24.85 | 18 | Warren Road (MD 943 east) –Cockeysville | Northbound exit and southbound entrance; access toWarren Road Light Rail station | |||
17.18 | 27.65 | 20 | Shawan Road –Cockeysville | Signed as exits 20A (east) and 20B (west); access toOregon Ridge Park andHunt Valley station | ||||
Sparks | 20.97 | 33.75 | 24 | Belfast Road –Butler,Sparks | ||||
Hereford | 24.26 | 39.04 | 27 | ![]() | ||||
Parkton | 27.61 | 44.43 | 31 | Middletown Road –Parkton | ||||
29.63 | 47.68 | 33 | ![]() | |||||
Maryland Line | 33.22 | 53.46 | 36 | ![]() | ||||
34.35 | 55.28 | 37 | Freeland Road | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | ||||
Mason–Dixon line | 34.50 0.000 | 55.52 0.000 | Maryland–Pennsylvania state line | |||||
Pennsylvania | York | Shrewsbury Township | 3.529 | 5.679 | 1 | 4 | ![]() | Diverging diamond interchange |
Springfield Township | 7.529 | 12.117 | 2 | 8 | ![]() | |||
10.340 | 16.641 | 3 | 10 | ![]() ![]() | Access via North Street | |||
Spring Garden Township | 13.657 | 21.979 | 4 | 14 | ![]() | |||
14.230 | 22.901 | 5 | 15 | ![]() ![]() | Directional T interchange; access toYork College of Pennsylvania | |||
15.497 | 24.940 | 6 | 16 | ![]() | Signed as exits 16A (south) and 16B (north); access toPenn State York | |||
17.600 | 28.324 | 7 | 18 | ![]() | Signed as exits 18A (east) and 18B (west) southbound | |||
Springettsbury Township | 18.746 | 30.169 | 8 | 19 | ![]() | Signed as exits 19A (east) and 19B (west) southbound | ||
Manchester Township | 21.071 | 33.910 | 9 | 21 | ![]() | Signed as exits 21A (east) and 21B (west) northbound; no southbound access to US 30 west | ||
21.648 | 34.839 | 10 | 22 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | I-83 BL/US 30 not signed northbound | |||
23.716 | 38.167 | 11 | 24 | ![]() | ||||
28.152 | 45.306 | 12 | 28 | ![]() | ||||
Newberry Township | 31.932 | 51.390 | 13 | 32 | ![]() | Access toGifford Pinchot State Park andRoundtop Mountain Resort | ||
33.374 | 53.710 | 14 | 33 | ![]() | ||||
Fairview Township | 33.874 | 54.515 | 14A | 34 | Valley Green | Northbound exit and entrance | ||
34.991 | 56.313 | 15 | 35 | ![]() | Access toGifford Pinchot State Park andRoundtop Mountain Resort | |||
35.904 | 57.782 | 16 | 36 | ![]() | ||||
37.893 | 60.983 | 17 | 38 | Reesers Summit | Access via Evergreen Road/Pleasant View Road | |||
38.775 | 62.402 | 18 | 39A | ![]() | ||||
39.055 | 62.853 | 39B | ![]() ![]() ![]() | I-76 / Turnpike exit 242 | ||||
39.246 | 63.160 | 18A | 40A | Limekiln Road | ||||
Cumberland | Lower Allen Township | 40.499 | 65.177 | 19 | 40B | New Cumberland | Access via Carlisle Road | |
Lemoyne | 41.193 | 66.294 | 21-20 | 41 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Signed as exits 41B (Lemoyne) and 41A (PA 581) northbound; no southbound access to Lemoyne; I-81 not signed southbound | ||
41.438 | 66.688 | 22 | 41B | Lemoyne | Southbound exit and northbound entrance; access via Lowther Street | |||
Dauphin | Harrisburg | 42.006– 42.636 | 67.602– 68.616 | John Harris Bridge over theSusquehanna River | ||||
42.671 | 68.672 | 23 | 43 | 2nd Street –Capitol | Directional T interchange; access toHarrisburg Transportation Center | |||
43.149 | 69.442 | 24 | 44A | ![]() ![]() | ||||
43.450 | 69.926 | 25 | 44B | 17th Street | Southbound exit and entrance | |||
43.653 | 70.253 | 19th Street | Northbound exit and entrance | |||||
44.658 | 71.870 | 26 | 45 | To Paxton Street | Northbound exit and entrance; access via 32nd Street | |||
45.512 | 73.244 | Paxton Street / Bass Pro Drive | Southbound exit and entrance | |||||
Swatara Township | 45.927 | 73.912 | 27 | 46A | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Eisenhower Interchange; northern terminus and exits 3A-B on I-283 | ||
46.852 | 75.401 | 28 | 46B (NB) 47 (SB) | ![]() ![]() | South end of US 322 overlap; Eisenhower Blvd. not signed northbound | |||
Lower Paxton Township | 47.940 | 77.152 | 29 | 48 | Union Deposit Road | |||
49.220 | 79.212 | 30 | 50 | ![]() | ||||
50.688 | 81.574 | 51 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Northern terminus; signed as exits 51B (north) and 51A (south); north end of US 322 overlap; I-81 exit 70 | ||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi |
I-83 has one auxiliary route:I-283, a connector from I-83 south toI-76 (Pennsylvania Turnpike) andPA 283 southeast ofHarrisburg.
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Location | York, Pennsylvania |
---|---|
Length | 5.43 mi (8.74 km) |
Existed | 1961–present |
Interstate 83 Business (I-83 Bus.) is a shortbusiness loop inYork, Pennsylvania. It begins at asemidirectional T interchange with I-83 south of York, continuing north as afreeway for two miles (3.2 km) before the freeway ends at a partial interchange with South George Street, with a southbound exit and northbound entrance. The route continues north along George Street through downtown York, intersectingPA 74/PA 462 before leaving the city and intersectingUS 30. Here,PA 181 begins and runs northconcurrent with I-83 Bus. for a short distance before I-83 Bus. ends at an interchange with I-83. PA 181 continues north past the northern terminus of I-83 Bus.
From its designation in 1961 until the designation ofI-376 Bus. in 2009, I-83 Bus. was the only business route of an Interstate Highway in Pennsylvania.
The entire route is inYork County.
Location | mi | km | Destinations | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
York Township | 0.00 | 0.00 | ![]() | Southern terminus; I-83 exit 15 | |
York | 1.86 | 2.99 | South George Street | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | |
Northern end of freeway section | |||||
3.34– 3.44 | 5.38– 5.54 | ![]() ![]() | |||
Manchester Township | 4.87 | 7.84 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | South end of concurrency with PA 181 | |
5.43 | 8.74 | ![]() ![]() ![]() | Northern terminus; I-83 exit 22 | ||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
|
Interstate 83 is the designation of the first Maryland highway to become an official part of the federal interstate roads system.
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